Image from @Grammarly
Thursday, November 2, 2017
Your Editing Shows if You're A Good Writer
Image from @Grammarly
Labels:
@grammarly,
editing,
Homophone,
Reading Workshop,
Writing
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
Friday, October 27, 2017
Traveling Along on a Friday
It looks like Dora is on a rode trip.
And yes I can spell road. :)
Image from @TheFunnyWorld
Labels:
Humor,
Puns,
Reading Workshop
Thursday, October 26, 2017
Monday, October 23, 2017
Make Your Weather Great!
It's Monday morning after a five day break. How's your weather? Take control and make it a great start to a great week!
Image from https://pbs.twimg.com/card_img
Labels:
Positive attitude,
Reading Workshop,
success
Monday, October 16, 2017
Friday, October 13, 2017
Readers Need Strategies
Reading Workshop student, Lynsay VanHoose created this Google slideshow to point out what makes reading strategies so important.
Labels:
Reading,
Reading Strategies,
Reading Workshop
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Monday, October 9, 2017
Reading Strategies
The
strategies in the picture below all help with understanding what you
read. Reading Workshop students, your assignment is to pick one
strategy, research it, create a Google slide show, and present it to the
class.
The
slide show needs to explain about the strategy, tell how it helps with
comprehension, and how to use it. Demonstrating the strategy should be
part of the presentation.
Slide Show
Organization
1. Title Page
2. Definition
3. Casual meaning
(your definition)
4. The way the
strategy helps reading . . .
5-8. Sample
passages
9. Sources
10. Image sources
Image from http://www.theclassroomkey.com/tag/reading-strategies
Wednesday, October 4, 2017
Tuesday, October 3, 2017
Comparing Yourself
What are Your Character Traits? |
For this project you will be writing a Dear Mr. McGuire letter. The topic of the
letter is "How would the book be different if I was the main character?"
The letter should have an opening paragraph that states basic
information like the title and the main character's name. It also should
connect with the reader.
For the second paragraph, start with the main character and build from there. Tell about the main character in
the book you are reading. Describe him/her. What makes him like he is?
How does he act? Think? Respond? Feel?
The next paragraph should be a compare/contrast between you and the main
character. You might tell how you are alike or how you are different.
You need at least one example to make your point clear.
One of the main keys to doing well on this project comes next. This
paragraph needs to describe in detail how the book would be different if
you were the main character. Specific details of differences will
strengthen your letter.
Please use details to support your writing. For example, if you state
that the main character is brave, you should have a detailed scene from the book that
proves your claim.
Whatever you do, DO NOT RETELL THE STORY! This assignment is to
write a letter to me about how the main character compares to you and
how the book would be different if you were the main character. If you
summarize or retell the book, you are not following the directions! The
best
essays will be written by a writer than gets inside the book and the
character.
Labels:
Character,
Fiction,
Letter Writing,
Reading Workshop
Wednesday, September 27, 2017
Monday, September 18, 2017
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Thursday, September 7, 2017
Tuesday, September 5, 2017
See Someone Being Kind? Share it!
Make our world a better place. Take care of your classmates and our school. When you see someone else being kind, share it. The tree in the hallway is bare. Fill it with leaves (Post it Notes). Share all the acts of kindness that you see in the hallway at SC.
Here are some ways you can be kind:
Image from St. Patrick Parish News
Here are some ways you can be kind:
- Ask “How may I help you?”
- Listen to someone carefully and without interrupting.
- Say “I’m sorry.”
- Be polite.
- Say ‘Please’ and ‘Thank you.’
- Offer to carry a person’s book bag.
- Buy a box of cookies and offer them around to strangers.
- Buy someone a gift from the dollar store
- Offer your seat in the cafeteria.
- Ask someone to sit by you in the cafeteria that you haven't sat with before.
- Write someone a letter or note.
- Invite someone to play at recess.
- Smile.
- Give someone a handwritten card.
- Pick up some trash.
- Return a misplaced or lost item.
- Tell someone about the best part of the day you just spent with them.
- Keep that sigh to yourself.
- Use a kind voice even if you have to fake it.
- Listen for the feelings behind the words.
- Buy a stranger an extra at lunch.
- Let someone go first through a door.
- Hold a door open for someone.
- Respect someone’s wishes.
- Write Post-It notes with encouraging messages and leave them in someone's tub or bookbag.
- Write a thank you note.
- Let people through in hallway traffic.
- Thank someone when they let you pass in the hallway.
- Use a compost bin and recycle as much as possible.
- Acknowledge someone else’s kindness to you.
- Tell someone how wonderful they are.
- Tell someone how happy you are to have them in your life.
- Pay a compliment.
- Volunteer.
- Write a notes and put it in someone's lunchbox.
- Share your knowledge with someone who needs it.
- Help someone with their homework.
- Help someone that is confused in class.
- Welcome new people to the school.
- Donate your “read” books to the library.
- Express your empathy.
- Smile at every stranger in the hallway.
- Be patient when you want to yell.
- Point out when someone’s shoe is untied or their backpack zipper is open
- Greet your neighbours when you see them
- Say hello to a classmate you don’t normally talk to
- Invite a schoolmate sitting on their own to join in your game
- Say something nice about someone, just because
- Smile at everyone
- Eat lunch at a different table with people you don't know that well
- Sit with someone eating alone at lunch
- Count to 10 in your head to avoid yelling at someone when you get angry
- Give positive feedback in class when someone is making a presentation or answers a question
- Smile more often.
- Talk to someone that is shy.
- Stop complaining for a week.
- Listen to someone that has a problem.
- Compliment someone you don't know in the hallway.
- Hold your tongue and don't say something mean
- When you hear someone starting drama just walk away.
- Compliment someone in front of others.
Image from St. Patrick Parish News
Labels:
Friendship,
Kindness,
Manners,
Reading Workshop
Thursday, August 31, 2017
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Monday, August 28, 2017
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)